Stakes High in Northern Kosovo as Elections Loom
November 1, 2013 5 min. read

Life has been good for Serbs living in northern Kosovo. For the past 14 years, since the NATO-led bombing campaign forced Serbia’s government out of power, some 50,000 residents in the four municipalities north of the Ibar River in Kosovo, which is mostly ethnic Albanian, have inhabited a sort of gray area in which both […]

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The World without US (2008)
September 17, 2013 3 min. read

Now that the U.S. has been poised to strike Syria militarily, it is helpful to consider the United States’ role in the world. The premise of this documentary is intriguing: what if the United States removed all of its troops and military hardware from the dozens of bases it has all over the world? The […]

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FPA’s Must Reads (April 26 to May 3)
May 3, 2013 3 min. read

This week’s must reads brought to you by the editorial staff at ForeignPolicyBlogs.com

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Serbia, Kosovo remain at odds
April 3, 2013 3 min. read

  Kosovo has been a hotly contested region of the Balkans for many centuries. Adversity has often devolved into violence, especially since the collapse of Yugoslavia in early 1990s. Kosovo declared itself an independent state in 2008, and is recognized as such by many countries. Yet Serbia, which lays claim to the territory, refuses to […]

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Bombies (2001)
July 9, 2012 2 min. read

  During the Vietnam War, the United States dropped as many as 2 million tons of cluster bombs on Laos. It was called a secret air war but was, of course, no secret to the Laotians. Thousands of people have been killed and wounded by the bombs, which continue to litter the countryside. What director […]

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